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Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno said his greatest fear is to receive an order to deploy thousands of troops. And with good reason.

The Army has only two combat-ready brigades right now, he said. Even the ones headed to Afghanistan are qualified for the trainer and adviser mission, not combat.

Odierno said hopes to get the number of trained and equipped brigades to seven by June 2014.

“There is going to come a time when we simply don’t have enough money to provide what I believe to be the right amount of ground forces to conduct contingency operations,” he said. “We’re not there yet, but it is something we are going to continue to review.”

Army Secretary John McHugh said he and the chief are committed that “whatever the Army’s end strength and its budgets may look like, we will never send a soldier into war unprepared, untrained or improperly equipped.” But he acknowledged that there are unprecedented uncertainties with which the service must contend.

The cost of sequestration is being covered by readiness and modernization dollars. That is why there are so few brigades trained and equipped for the combat mission. Service leaders look to accelerate the drawdown to help free up some money and balance training, modernization and end strength.

One step in this endeavor is an effort to cut 25 percent of overhead in headquarters. The Pentagon only required a 20-percent cut, but Odierno said the larger slice “can achieve some significant savings” — thousands of soldiers that could instead help fill a Brigade Combat Team, for example.

But many problems are beyond Army control. Leading that category is a gridlocked Congress’ habit of passing “continuing resolutions.” These force the military to operate on the previous year’s budgets — which are several billion shorter than the president’s current budget proposals.

“By the time any budget is developed through the services, cleared through the Department of Defense, goes through the [Office of Management and Budget], goes through the administration, goes to Capitol Hill, gets through the House and Senate and is passed and is signed by the president, by the time we are executing that budget it is almost three years old,” McHugh said. “So a budget that locks us through a [continuing resolution] into last year’s budget is really a three-year-old budget. You can’t run the most important military on the face of the earth with three-year old budgets.”

These resolutions, combined with the crippling effect of sequestration, have had a negative impact on 485 programs, McHugh said. As a result, the service can’t start new contracts “which is enormously problematic” for an Army trying to evolve into a new era of technology.

And that means every program is in jeopardy.

“What do we need? We need to make sure our soldiers have the best equipment possible,” Odierno said. “We need to make sure our individual soldiers have protective equipment, they have the right sights, they have the right weapons. … We need something to replace the Humvee, we need to replace the Bradley. We need to invest in our aviation systems — our UH-60s, our Apaches, our CH-47s. We need to make sure that in the complex environments we are going to operate in that we have a network that enables us to pass information very quickly down to the lowest element. We need all of it. The bottom line is we can’t afford all of it. So we’re going to have to make some tough decisions.”

At the same time, many of the DOD's problems are entirely self-inflicted or otherwise easily remedied by simple policy changes within the Executive Branch that don't require more money, just more intelligent management and priority selection. The bio-fuel requirements and the insane cost the services pay to meet them, for instance.

At the same time, many of the DOD's problems are entirely self-inflicted or otherwise easily remedied by simple policy changes within the Executive Branch that don't require more money, just more intelligent management and priority selection. The bio-fuel requirements and the insane cost the services pay to meet them, for instance.

Yeah, I've always thought that was a great way to criple the services while looking Green. When your job
is to kill the enemy...who the fuck cares if its Green???

Yeah, I've always thought that was a great way to criple the services while looking Green. When your job
is to kill the enemy...who the fuck cares if its Green???

That isn't the half of it, the military doesn't get to buy it after all the supplement payments and Federal supports are applied like the stuff you buy at the pump which looks semi-competitive with real gas or Diesel (In price per volume, though not in actual energy content) to Joe Consumer.

What actually comes out of the services' O&M appropriations per gallon for that shit would scandalize you, the whole thing is a giant money-laundering scam to steal military operational funds and turn them into farm-State and Green votes while preserving the appearance to the Left that the military is vastly overfunded and to the Right that Congress is actually taking care of it.